For month three in Swaziland, our teams had the opportunity to work alongside Adventures in Missions, the organization responsible for the World Race. AIM mobilizes missionaries to go all over the world, including some of their bases in other countries. AIM has several bases in Swaziland, but the headquarter of AIM Swaziland is in Manzini, which is where we were.
 
AIM has care points, which are basically feeding sites for children, spread out throughout Swaziland. Sponsored by churches and individuals in America, each care point serves at least one meal per day to about 250 children. Kids come from all around – from school, from their homes, over mountains – to  eat at the care points.
 
Adventures in Missions employs a discipleship team to pour into the kids, and many of the “gogos,” or grandmothers, and ladies in the surrounding communities help cook the food. AIM has both city and rural care points. Our job was basically to come alongside of what AIM has been doing here long-term at the care points and assist them in any and every way needed. We did everything from packing candy to praying for the sick.
 
Candy Packing
 Our first day of ministry we spent the entire day packing almost 3,000 bags of candy, cookies, and chips to bring to the care points. This extra man-power was really helpful to AIM to get these bags knocked out for the Christmas parties.
 
Care Point Christmas Parties
 Yes, that’s right. Christmas. In November. Schools are out of session in December, so the care points don’t operate during the holiday either. But AIM still wanted to do something special for the children at the rural care points for Christmas, so several days per week we went to various care points to help with the Christmas parties. Basically this meant we gave the ladies who cook some relief from chopping vegetables, played games with the kids, helped serve the meals, and handed out the candy bags and tons of cabbages. A lot of the time we also got to hear the children sing, and we saw several traditional Swazi dance shows from the children. It was such a treat!
 
 City Care Points
 The city care points operate a little bit differently than the rural care points. They actually have pre-school for the younger children at the care point and then the meals are served later in the afternoon to all of the children in the area. Our two teams separated between four different city care points that we also went to at least once or twice per week.
 My favorite part of this experience was helping this one deaf child that most of the people around him never seemed to have time for. We really bonded.

Hope House
 Every day that we had a Christmas party, we spent our mornings at a local faith-based clinic called Hope House. We spent an hour there about three days per week, and had conversations with the patients, got to know them, and prayed for them. Patients at Hope House ranged from those with HIV/AIDS to car accident victims who were paralyzed from the waist down.

We also intentionally ministered to the care givers who attend to the patients and made sure to pray for and get to know them as well. Again, God really used us to bless and encourage those care givers who constantly pour out to help at Hope House.

We did a few other things like hand-print cutting and Christmas card sorting. They don’t seem like a big deal, but I know they saved the employees at AIM a lot of time and really helped them focus on other aspects of their ministry.
 
I’m really thankful for all of the ways we got to serve in Swaziland this month, and I really enjoyed working with AIM Swaziland.